55 Million Face Hunger. The World Cut Their Aid.
West Africa faces its worst hunger crisis in years as aid funding dries up and the Iran war chokes fertilizer supplies—just as the lean season arrives.

Nigeria's World Food Programme used to feed 1.3 million people. This year, they'll reach 72,000.
That's not a typo. Funding cuts slashed the program by 95%. In Cameroon, over half a million people are weeks away from losing food assistance entirely. Across West and Central Africa, 55 million people are heading into the lean season—the brutal June-to-August stretch before harvests come in—with less help than they've had in years.
The Albis Perception Gap Index scored this story an 8 out of 10. African and European outlets covered it. Everyone else barely noticed.
When Everything Hits at Once
The lean season is already dangerous. Family food reserves run out. Prices spike. Malnutrition climbs. It happens every year, but 2026 is different.
Two crises are colliding. First, humanitarian budgets got gutted. The UN World Food Programme needs $174.7 million just to keep operations running through July in the Central Sahel. They don't have it.
Second, the Iran war choked off fertilizer supplies. Five of the world's biggest fertilizer exporters—Iran, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, the UAE, and Bahrain—ship their products through the Strait of Hormuz. That's been effectively closed since Iran mined it on March 13.
African farmers already pay the highest fertilizer prices on the planet. Now those prices are spiking again, right when they need to plant for the next harvest.
The Numbers Are Staggering
In Nigeria, funding shortfalls forced the WFP to abandon nutrition programs for over 300,000 children. Malnutrition levels in several northern states deteriorated from "serious" to "critical."
Currently, 41.8 million people across the region face acute food insecurity. Without urgent intervention, that number hits 52.8 million by June.
This isn't a drought. It's not a crop failure. It's a famine manufactured by budget cuts and geopolitics.
A War 4,000 Miles Away
The Iran war isn't just about oil. Fertilizer supply chains are breaking. Cereal production in East Africa already dropped 16% year-on-year in 2022 when fertilizer prices last spiked. Experts warned disruptions could trigger a 20% decline in food production across sub-Saharan Africa.
That decline is now intersecting with the worst funding crisis in years—just as the lean season begins.
What Happens Next
June is 10 weeks away. That's when food reserves run out and families start skipping meals. Aid organizations are already scaling back. The funding isn't coming.
Wars in faraway places don't stay faraway. A mining operation in the Strait of Hormuz becomes a fertilizer shortage in West Africa becomes 55 million people facing hunger.
The world moved on to the next crisis. The lean season didn't.
Sources & Verification
Based on 5 sources from 2 regions
- World Food ProgrammeInternational
- UN NewsInternational
- FAOInternational
- CNBCNorth America
- New York TimesNorth America
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